The Greek economy meanwhile showed improvement in the second quarter of the year, shrinking by 4.6 percent from 5.6 percent in the first quarter, official data showed on Monday.

In foreign exchange, the euro fell to $1.3306 from $1.3336 late in New York on Friday. The dollar rose to 96.66 yen from 96.18 yen on Friday.

On the London Bullion Market, the price of gold climbed to $1,326.65 an ounce from $1,309 on Friday.

On the corporate front, shares in Prudential climbed 2.58 percent to 1,214 .5 pence after Britain’s biggest insurer posted a rise in operating profits on strong product demand in the United States and Asia.

Asian stock markets mostly closed higher on Monday but Tokyo ended lower as Japan posted lower-than-expected economic growth and after US stocks had retreated from record peaks.

Last week’s positive industrial output figures out of China continued to lend support, traders said.

In contrast, disappointing figures out of Japan on Monday showed economic growth in the world’s third-largest economy slowed in the April-June quarter, raising questions about Tokyo’s bid to revive its economy after years of stagnation.

The cabinet office said Japan’s economy expanded 0.6 percent from the previous quarter, slower than a revised 0.9-percent increase between January and March.

The markets will now look to key U.S. economic figures — including retail sales and industrial output — due out this week, as investors eye clues as to when the U.S. Federal Reserve will start rolling back its huge stimulus drive.